I Thought Everyone Was Exaggerating About How Great The Airport In Seoul Was Until I Actually Went There

Steve Kovach, provided by

Published 5:08 pm, Monday, April 14, 2014

Since I live on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, I try to fly out of New York's LaGuardia Airport whenever I can. It's just a 15-minute cab ride, and I can get through security quickly.

But, boy, is it a dump, especially in the United Airlines terminal. There's an Au Bon Pain, but it's really just a chow line without the regular storefront you see in most airports. That's about it.

So the bar was set low when I flew to Incheon International Airport in Seoul, South Korea, on a recent business trip. Still, I had a lot of people, including two of my Korean colleagues, tell me it was the best airport in the world (it was ranked the world's second-best airport by Skytrax, a high honor).

I've only been to a handful of international airports — including London's Heathrow, Schiphol in Amsterdam, and El Prat in Barcelona — and they're great, but Incheon is by far the most impressive one I've ever been to.

The building itself is a modern work of art. Everything is in one giant curved terminal instead of separate terminals like most airports. You can see how beautiful it is from the outside:But the inside is the real treat. Incheon is essentially a high-class shopping mall with airplane gates in between the stores and restaurants. It goes on seemingly forever.There are a lot of classy stores like Burberry.And Chanel.There was even a drug store.

I visited one of the food courts, up this escalator. It was 9 a.m., but since Korean breakfast food is the same at all hours of the day, I had to get noodles.

The food court was cool. You order at a separate station and wait for your number to be called at the kitchen.

But the biggest draw was the duty-free shops. There were several of them and most were selling the same stuff, as far as I could tell. A lot of people walked out with giant shopping bags stuffed with booze, jewelry, and designer perfume.

Now compare all that to my typical experience at LaGuardia.

Disclosure: Samsung paid for a portion of our trip to South Korea for a separate series of stories about the company. It paid for the flight and some meals. Business Insider paid for lodging and all other expenses.